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Stories Of The Companions ::
قصص الصحابة رضوان الله عليهم
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'Abbaad Ibn Bishr |
‘Abdullah Ibn ‘Abbaas |
‘Abdullah Ibn 'Amr Ibn Al-'Aas |
'Abdullah ibn Hudhafah as-Sahmi |
'Abdullah ibn Jahsh |
'Abdullah Ibn Mas'uud |
'Abdullah Ibn Rawaahah |
'Abdullah Ibn Sailam |
'Abdallah Ibn 'Umar |
'Abdullah ibn Umm Maktum |
'Abdullah Ibn Az-Zubair |
'Abd Ar- Rahman Ibn Abi Bakr |
'Abd Ar-Rahman Ibn 'Awf |
Abu Ad-Dardaa |
Abu Ayuub Al-Ansaariy |
Abu Dhar Al-Ghifaariy |
Abu Jabir Abdallah bin
Amr bin Hiram |
Abu Hurairah |
Abu-l Aas ibn ar-Rabiah |
Abu Muusaa Al-Ash'ariy |
Abu Sufyaan Ibn Al-Haarith |
Abu Ubaydah ibn al-Jarrah |
'Adiyy ibn Hatim |
'Aishah bint Abi Bakr |
Al-'Abbaas Ibn 'Abd Al-Muttalib |
Al-Baraa' Ibn Maalik |
Al-Miqdaad Ibn 'Amr |
'Ammaar Ibn Yaasir |
'Amr Ibn Al -'Aas |
'Amr Ibn Al-Jamuuh |
An-Nuayman ibn Amr |
An-Numan ibn Muqarrin |
Asmaa bint Abu Bakr |
At-Tufail Ibn 'Amr Ad-Dawsiy |
Az-Zubair Ibn Al-'Awaam |
Barakah |
Bilaal Ibn Rabaah |
Fatimah bint Muhammad |
Fayruz ad-Daylami |
Hakim ibn Hazm |
Hamzah Ibn 'Abd Al-Muttalib |
Hudhaifah Ibn Al-Yamaan |
Ikrimah ibn Abi Jahl |
Ja'far Ibn Abi Taalib |
Julaybib |
Habib Ibn Zaid |
Khabbab ibn al-Arat |
Khaalid Ibn Al-Waliid |
Khaalid Ibn Sa'iid |
Khubaib Ibn 'Adiy |
Mi'aadh Ibn Jabal |
Muhammad ibn Maslamah |
Mus'ab Ibn 'Umair |
Nuaym ibn Masud |
Rabiah ibn Kab |
Ramlah bint Abi Sufyan |
Rumaysa bint Milhan |
Qais Ibn Sad Ibn Ubaadah |
Sa'd Ibn Abi Waqqaas |
Sa'd Ibn Mitaadh |
Sa'd Ibn 'Ubaadah |
Sa'iid Ibn Aamir |
Sa'iid ibn Zayd |
Saalim Mawlaa Abi Hudhaifah |
Salamah Ibn Al-Akwa' |
Salmaan Al-Faarisiy |
Suhayb ar-Rumi |
Suhayb Ibn Sinaan |
Suhayl Ibn'Amr |
Talhah Ibn - Ubaid Allah |
Thaabit Ibn Qais |
Thumamah ibn Uthal |
'Ubaadah Ibn As-Saamit |
Ubaiy Ibn Ka'b |
Umair Ibn Sa'd |
Umair Ibn Wahb |
'Umraan Ibn Husain |
Umm Salamah |
Uqbah ibn Aamir |
Usaamah Ibn Zaid |
Usaid Ibn Hudair |
'Utbah Ibn Ghazwaan |
'Uthmaan Ibn Madh'uun |
Zayd al-Khayr |
Zayd Ibn Al-Khattaab |
Zayd Ibn Haarithah |
Zayd Ibn Thaabit
Abu Hurairah
The Memory of the Revelation Era
It is true that a person’s intelligence
reckons against him, and those who own extraordinary gifts often pay the
price at a time when they should receive a reward or thanks. The noble
Companion Abu Hurairah is one of those. He had an unusual gift which was his
strong memory.
He was good in the art of listening and his memory was good in the art of
storing. He used to listen, understand, and memorize; then he hardly forgot
one word, no matter how long his life lasted. That is why his gift made him
memorize and narrate the Prophetic traditions (Hadiths) more than any of the
Companions of the Messenger (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam).
During the period of Al-Wada’iin, the writers who were specialized in
telling lies about the Messenger of Allah (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam)
misused Abu Hurairah’s wide reputation for narrating about the Messenger of
Allah (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) , and whenever they fabricated a hadith
they used to say, “Abu Hurairah said....” By so doing they were attempting
to make Abu Hurairah’s reputation and status as a narrator about the Prophet
(sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) questionable. However, because of the
extraordinary efforts exerted by great reverent people who devoted their
lives to serve the Prophetic Hadith and reject every falsehood, Abu Hurairah
(radhi Allahu 'anhu) was saved from the lies and fabrications that the
vicious wanted to infiltrate into Islam through him and to make him bear
their sins.
Now, when we hear a preacher, lecturer or the one who delivers the Friday
sermon saying this transmitted expression, “Narrated by Abu Hurairah (RA):
The Messenger of Allah (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) said, “I say when you
hear this name in that form, or when you meet it many times in books of
hadith, biography, jurisprudence, and religious books generally, you have to
know that you are meeting the most interesting personality of the Companions
with regard to his ability and talents of listening because of the wonderful
traditions and wise instructions that he memorized about the Prophet (sollallahu
'alayhi wa sallam), which was his great fortune and incomparable gift.
Having this gift (May Allah be pleased with him), he was naturally one of
the Companions who were most capable of vividly reminding you of those days
when the Messenger (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) and his Companions were
living and of transporting you to that horizon which witnessed the glorious
deeds of the Prophet (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) and his Companions who
gave vitality and significance to life and led to the right path.
So if these lines have moved your curiosity to get introduced to Abu
Hurairah and hear some things about him, here is what you want.
He was one of those who reflected the Islamic revolution and all the
tremendous changes that it brought about. He changed from a workman to a
master, from a lost man in the crowd to an Imam and outstanding man, from a
worshiper of accumulated stones to a believer in Allah, the One, the
Irresistable.
He said: I was brought up as an orphan, and I emigrated as a poor man. I
worked for Busrah Bint Ghazwaan for my daily food. I used to serve them when
they dismounted, and walked near them when they rode. And now Allah has
married her to me. All praise to Allah Who made the religion our support and
made Abu Hurairah an Imam.
It was A.H. 7 when he went to the Prophet (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam),
while the latter was in Khaibar, and embraced Islam. From the time he pledge
allegiance to the Prophet (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam), he would not part
from him except to sleep. Thus were the four years in which he lived with
the Messenger of Allah (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) from the time he
embraced Islam till the Prophet died. We say that those four years were very
long, full of virtuous words, deeds, and listening.
By virtue of his good nature, Abu Hurairah was able to play a prominent role
by which he could serve the religion of Allah. There were many war heroes
among the Companions. There were many jurisprudents, propagators of the
faith, and teachers, but the milieu and people lacked writing and scribes.
In that time, mankind - not only Arabs - was not much concerned with
writing. It was not a sign of development in any society. It was the same
even in Europe not so long ago. Most of its kings, with Charlemagne at the
top of the list, could not read or write, although they were intelligent and
capable at the same time.
Let us go back to our talk about Abu Hurairah. He realized by his nature the
need of the new society that Islam was building for those who would keep its
legacy and teachings. There were scribes among the Companions who used to
write, but they were few. Besides, some of them had no free time to be able
to write every hadith that the Messenger uttered.
Abu Hurairah was not a scribe, but learned by heart, and he had this
necessary free time, for he had no land to plant or commerce to take care
of. Believing that he had embraced Islam late, he intended to compensate for
what he had missed by accompanying and sitting with the Messenger (sollallahu
'alayhi wa sallam) . Besides, he himself knew the gift Allah had bestowed on
him, which was his broad, retentive memory, which became even broader and
stronger after the Messenger (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) had invoked
Allah to bless it for him. Then why should he not be one of those who took
the burden of keeping this legacy and transmitting it to the corning
generations ? Yes, this was the role that his talents made possible for him
to play, and he had to play it without flagging.
Abu Hurairah was not one of the scribes, but, as we said, he had a strong
memory that made him retain things in his mind very quickly. He had neither
land to plant nor commerce to keep him busy; hence he used to not part from
the presence of the Messenger, neither in travel nor at other times.
Thus, he devoted himself and his precise memory to memorizing the hadiths
and instructions of the Messenger of Allah (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) .
When the Prophet (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) died, Abu Hurairah kept
narrating his traditions, which made some Companions wonder how he could
know all those hadiths? When did he hear them?
Abu Hurairah (RA) shed light on this phenomenon, as if defending himself
against the doubts of some of the Companions.
He said: You say that Abu Hurairah
narrates much about the Prophet (sollallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) and that the
Muhaajiruun who preceded him to Islam do not narrate those traditions. But
my friends among the Muhaajiruun were busy with their contracts in the
market, and my friends among the Ansaar were busy with their lands. I was a
poor man, always sitting with the Messenger of Allah, so I was present when
they were absent, and I memorized if they forgot. Besides, one day the
Prophet (SAW) said, “Whoever spreads his garment till I finish my speech,
then collects it to his chest, will never forget whatever I’ve said!”
Therefore, I spread my clothes and he directed his speech to me, then I
collected it. By Allah, I did not forget what he said to me later on. By
Allah, I would have narrated nothing at all, but for a verse of Allah’s
Book:
< Surely those who conceal the manifest Revelations and the guidance
which We have revealed, after We have made it clear for the people in the
Book, those it is who shall be cursed by GOD and by those who curse >
(2:159).
This was the way Abu Hurairah explained the reason for being unique in
narrating so many hadiths about the Messenger of Allah (SAW). First, he had
the time to accompany the Prophet more than any one else. Second, he had a
strong memory blessed by the Messenger so it became stronger. Third, he did
not narrate because he was fond of narrating but because spreading those
traditions was the responsibility of his religion and life; otherwise he
would be a concealer of the good and right, negligent of his duties, and
would deserve the punishment of the negligent.
For these reasons he kept narrating, and nothing could stop or hinder him,
even when Umar, the Commander of the Faithful, told him, “Stop narrating
about the Messenger of Allah, or I’ll send you to the land of the Daws” —
the land of his people. But this prohibition from the Commander of the
Faithful was not an accusation of Abu Hurairah, but a support of a theory
Umar was adopting and stressing, that the Muslims during this very period
should read and memorize nothing but the Qur’aan so that it would settle in
their hearts and minds. The Qur’aan is Islam’s book, constitution and
dictionary. Narrating about the Messenger of Allah (SAW) abundantly,
especially in those years that followed his death when the Qur’aan was being
compiled, caused unnecessary confusion. That is why Umar used to say, “Get
busy with the Qur’aan; it is Allah’s words. He also used to say, “Narrate a
little about the Messenger of Allah but for what can be followed.”
When he sent Abu Muusaa Al-Ash’ariy to Iraq, he said to him, “You are going
to people where you can hear the sound of the Qur’aan in their mosques as if
it were a drone of bees. Let them do what they are doing and don’t occupy
them with traditions. I’m your partner in this.” The Qur’aan had been
compiled in a warranted way such that nothing had crept into it. But Umar
could not guarantee that some traditions were not slanted, forged, or taken
as a way to tell lies about the Messenger of Allah (SAW) and thus harm
Islam.
Abu Hurairah appreciated Umar’s point of view, but he was also sure of
himself and his honesty. He did not want to conceal anything of the
traditions or knowledge that he thought would be a sin to conceal. Hence,
whenever he found a chance to unload the traditions he had heard or
understood from his breast, he did so.
An important reason which played a prominent role in provoking troubles
around Abu Hurairah for talking about and narrating many traditions was the
fact that there was another narrator in those days who used to narrate and
exaggerate about the Messenger (SAW), and the Muslim Companions were not
certain of his traditions. This narrator was Ka’b Al-Ahbaar, who was a Jew
who had embraced Islam.
Once Marwaan Ibn Al-Hakam wanted to examine AbuHurairah’s ability to
memorize. He invited him to sit with him and asked him to narrate about the
Messenger of Allah (SAW) while a scribe sat behind a screen and was told to
write whatever Abu Hurairah said. After a year, Marwaan invited him once
again and asked him to narrate the same traditions the scribe had written.
Abu Hurairah had not forgotten a single word!
He used to say about himself, “No one among the Companions of the Messenger
of Allah (SAW) narrates about him more than I do except Abdullah Ibn Amr Ibn
Al-’Aaa. He used to write, but I didn’t.”
Imam Ash- Shaafiy (RA) said about him, “No one in his period was more
capable of narrating traditions with such a memory than Abu Hurairah.”
Al-Bukhaari (RA) said, “Almost eight hundred or more Companions, followers
(the generation after the Companions) and people of knowledge narrated
through Abu Hurairah.” Thus, Abu Hurairah was a big, immortal school.
Abu Hurairah (RA) was an ever-and oft-returning worshiper who used to take
turns with his wife and daughter in praying the whole night. He prayed one
third of the night, his wife another third, and his daughter a third. Thus,
not one hour of the night passed in Abu Hurairah’s house without prayers. In
order to be free to accompany the Messenger of Allah (SAW), he suffered the
cruelty of hunger like nobody else. He used to talk about the times when
hunger was so cruel that he would put a stone on his stomach, press his
liver with his hand, and fall in the mosque while twisting that stone such
that some of his friends thought that he was epileptic, but he was not.
When he embraced Islam, he had only one continuously oppressing problem that
would not let him sleep. That problem was his mother, for from that day
onwards she refused to embrace Islam. Not only that, but she also used to
hurt her son by speaking ill of the Messenger of Allah. One day she spoke to
Abu Hurairah about the Messenger of Allah (SAW) in a way that he hated. So,
he left her crying and sad and went to the Messenger’s mosque.
Let us listen to him narrate the rest of the story: I went to the Messenger
of Allah crying and said, “O Messenger of Allah, I used to call Umm Hurairah
to Islam, and she used to refuse. Today, I called her, but she spoke to me
about you in a way that I hated. Invoke Allah to guide Umm Hurairah to
Islam.” So the Messenger of Allah (sallallahu alayhi wa sallam) said, “O
Allah, guide Umm Hurairah.” Then I ran out to give her the good news about
the Messenger of Allah’s invocation to Allah. When I arrived at the door, I
found it closed, and I heard the sound of water. She called, “Stay where you
are, Abu Hurairah.” Then she put on her shift and veil and she came out
saying, “I bear witness that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is
His slave and Messenger.” So I hurried to the Messenger of Allah (SAW)
crying out for joy as I had cried for sadness and I said, “Here is good
news, O Messenger of Allah. Allah has answered your invocation. Allah has
guided Umm Hurairah to Islam.” I added, “O Messenger of Allah, invoke Allah
to make all the believers love me and my mother.” He said, “O Allah, make
every believer love this slave of Yours and his mother.”
Abu Hurairah led the life of a worshiper and fighter. He did not miss a
battle or a pious deed. During the caliphate of Umar Ibn Al-Khattaab, he
made him governor of Bahrain. Umar, as we know, used to call his rulers
sternly to account. If he made one of them governor when he had two
garments, on the day he ceased to govern , he should still own no more than
those two garments, and it would be better to leave office with only one!
But if he left Office with any display of wealth, he would not escape Umar’s
reckoning, even if the source of his fortune was halaal. It was another
world that Umar filled with wonders and miracles.
When Abu Hurairah was made governor of Bahrain, he saved some money from
halaal sources. However, Umar knew and invited him to Al-Madinah.
Let Abu Hurairah narrate the quick conversation that took place between
them: Umar said to me, “O the enemy of Allah and His Book, did you steal the
money of Allah?” I said, “I am not the enemy of Allah or His Book. I am the
enemy of their enemy. Besides, I am not the one who steals the money of
Allah!” He said, “Then how did you gather 10,000?” I said, “I had a horse
that had foaled repeatedly.” Umar said, “Put it (the money) in the Bait Al-Maal
(the treasury).”
Abu Hurairah gave the money to Umar and raised his hands towards the sky
saying, “O Allah, forgive the Commander of the Faithful.” After a while Umar
called Abu Hurairah and offered him the governorship again. However, he
refused and apologized. Umar asked why. Abu Hurairah said, “So that my honor
would not be at stake, my money would not be taken, and my back would not be
beaten.” He added, “I'm afraid I would judge without knowledge or speak
without patience.”
One day, his yearning to meet Allah intensified. While his visitors were
invoking Allah to cure him of his disease, he was imploring Allah saying, “O
Allah, I love to meet You, so love to meet me.”
In A.H. 59, he died at the age of 78. His
calm body was buried in a blessed place among the reverent inhabitants of
Al-Baqi.
Returning from his funeral, the people kept reciting many of the traditions
that he had taught them about the noble Messenger. One of the recent Muslims
asked his friends, “Why was our deceased sheikh called Abu Hurairah?” His
knowing friend answered, “In the pre-Islamic time his name was ‘Abd Shams.
When he embraced Islam, the Messenger (SAW) called him ‘Abd Ar-Rahman. He
used to be sympathetic towards animals. He had a cat that he used to feed,
carry, clean, and shelter, and it used to accompany him as if it were his
shadow. Thus, he was called Abu Hurairah, which means father of the small
cat. May Allah be pleased with him.”
©
EsinIslam.Com
Links To Sahabah The Companions Of Prophet Muhammad
(SAW):
Stories Of The Companions ::
قصص الصحابة رضوان الله عليهم
--
'Abbaad Ibn Bishr |
‘Abdullah Ibn ‘Abbaas |
‘Abdullah Ibn 'Amr Ibn Al-'Aas |
'Abdullah ibn Hudhafah as-Sahmi |
'Abdullah ibn Jahsh |
'Abdullah Ibn Mas'uud |
'Abdullah Ibn Rawaahah |
'Abdullah Ibn Sailam |
'Abdallah Ibn 'Umar |
'Abdullah ibn Umm Maktum |
'Abdullah Ibn Az-Zubair |
'Abd Ar- Rahman Ibn Abi Bakr |
'Abd Ar-Rahman Ibn 'Awf |
Abu Ad-Dardaa |
Abu Ayuub Al-Ansaariy |
Abu Dhar Al-Ghifaariy |
Abu Jabir Abdallah bin
Amr bin Hiram |
Abu Hurairah |
Abu-l Aas ibn ar-Rabiah |
Abu Muusaa Al-Ash'ariy |
Abu Sufyaan Ibn Al-Haarith |
Abu Ubaydah ibn al-Jarrah |
'Adiyy ibn Hatim |
'Aishah bint Abi Bakr |
Al-'Abbaas Ibn 'Abd Al-Muttalib |
Al-Baraa' Ibn Maalik |
Al-Miqdaad Ibn 'Amr |
'Ammaar Ibn Yaasir |
'Amr Ibn Al -'Aas |
'Amr Ibn Al-Jamuuh |
An-Nuayman ibn Amr |
An-Numan ibn Muqarrin |
Asmaa bint Abu Bakr |
At-Tufail Ibn 'Amr Ad-Dawsiy |
Az-Zubair Ibn Al-'Awaam |
Barakah |
Bilaal Ibn Rabaah |
Fatimah bint Muhammad |
Fayruz ad-Daylami |
Hakim ibn Hazm |
Hamzah Ibn 'Abd Al-Muttalib |
Hudhaifah Ibn Al-Yamaan |
Ikrimah ibn Abi Jahl |
Ja'far Ibn Abi Taalib |
Julaybib |
Habib Ibn Zaid |
Khabbab ibn al-Arat |
Khaalid Ibn Al-Waliid |
Khaalid Ibn Sa'iid |
Khubaib Ibn 'Adiy |
Mi'aadh Ibn Jabal |
Muhammad ibn Maslamah |
Mus'ab Ibn 'Umair |
Nuaym ibn Masud |
Rabiah ibn Kab |
Ramlah bint Abi Sufyan |
Rumaysa bint Milhan |
Qais Ibn Sad Ibn Ubaadah |
Sa'd Ibn Abi Waqqaas |
Sa'd Ibn Mitaadh |
Sa'd Ibn 'Ubaadah |
Sa'iid Ibn Aamir |
Sa'iid ibn Zayd |
Saalim Mawlaa Abi Hudhaifah |
Salamah Ibn Al-Akwa' |
Salmaan Al-Faarisiy |
Suhayb ar-Rumi |
Suhayb Ibn Sinaan |
Suhayl Ibn'Amr |
Talhah Ibn - Ubaid Allah |
Thaabit Ibn Qais |
Thumamah ibn Uthal |
'Ubaadah Ibn As-Saamit |
Ubaiy Ibn Ka'b |
Umair Ibn Sa'd |
Umair Ibn Wahb |
'Umraan Ibn Husain |
Umm Salamah |
Uqbah ibn Aamir |
Usaamah Ibn Zaid |
Usaid Ibn Hudair |
'Utbah Ibn Ghazwaan |
'Uthmaan Ibn Madh'uun |
Zayd al-Khayr |
Zayd Ibn Al-Khattaab |
Zayd Ibn Haarithah |
Zayd Ibn Thaabit |
Muhammad The Messenger Of Allah ::
محمّد رسول الله صلى الله عليه
وسلّم --
Biography by a Muslim, Muhammad Hamidullah |
Biography by a non-Muslim, K. Rao |
The Prophet (s.a.w.) as a blessing to mankind |
Description Of The Prophet (s.a.w.) |
Finality of Prophethood |
Last Sermon Of The Prophets (s.a.w.) |
What other scholars say about the Prophet (s.a.w.) and
additional sayings |
The Rightly Guided Caliphs ::
الخلفاء الراشدون رضوان عليهم |
The First Caliph, Abu Bakr (632-634 A.C.)
|
The Second Caliph, Umar (634-644 A.C.) |
The Third Caliph, Uthman (644-656 A.C.) |
The Fourth Caliph, Ali (656-661 A.C.)
|
Muslim Profiles --
Imam Abu Hanifa |
Imam Ibn Hanbal |
Imam Malik |
Imam Al Shafi’i |
Al Ayoubi |
Al Battani |
Al Biruni |
Al Buzjani |
Al Farghani |
Al Kindi |
Al Idrisi |
Al Khayyam |
Al Khawarizmi |
Al Tusi |
Al Zahrawi |
Dan Fodio |
Ibn Al-Baitar |
Ibn Al Nafis |
Ibn Batuta |
Ibn Haiyan |
Ibn Khaldun |
Ibn Rushd |
Ibn Qurra |
Ibn Sina |
Ibn Ziyad |
Ibn Zuhr |
Sheikh Abdulfattah Abu-Abdullah Adelabu (Ph. D. Damas)
|